“The Long Revolution of the Global
South – Towards a New Anti-Imperialist
International,” by Samir Amin, 2019
This book
is part 2 of a memoir of Amin’s work and travels throughout the global south
from about 1970 to 2016. The book covers
individual countries in the Middle East and North Africa, the rest of Africa, central
Asia, the ‘far’ east, Latin America, eastern Europe and lastly China, Vietnam
and Cuba. It is a work of historical
materialism that reads a bit like a leftist travelogue, which sometimes turns
humorous when he derides the corrupt characters he meets. Through it Amin elucidates his theory that a
new movement has to be formed in the peripheral economies of the global south
against the imperialist triad – the dominant capitalists of the U.S., Europe and Japan.
Samir Amin |
The title
hints that he thinks this process will be … long - really long. Amin: “We must understand that the polarization
produced by the history of really existing capitalism requires another view of
the long transition (over centuries) from capitalism to socialism.” To my mind, this stagest perspective shades
the whole book. The text of the book makes
it clear that the comprador bourgeoisies in the global south who preside over
‘lumpen development’ are the majority of countries, while “emergent nations”
who are successful in a “national popular” project are few – China and southern Korea only. To quote Amin on South
Korea: “Korea’s success is a real danger
for imperialism.” He discounts Iran, Brazil,
India and South Africa as
only partly emergent. He is mum on Russia’s status.
He is somewhat positive on fragile developments in Latin
America (the pink tide) – at least in 2016. That tide is fragile as he predicted –
turned back in Brazil and Ecuador.
Amin,
through his organizations, held conferences over the years where socialists,
revolutionary nationalists, ordinary nationalists, progressives and reformers
of various countries debated and discussed politics. He name-checks intellectuals and activists he
met and comes across as non-sectarian. Amin
was known throughout Africa as someone expert
in political economy. He was hired by
various governments to look at their accounting books and recommend new economic
policies. According to him, the
governments never took his advice.
The
emphasis for Amin is on organizing the economy democratically – which means in
the interests of the workers and peasants.
He opposes false ‘representative’ democracy controlled by capital and
supports a direct participatory democracy of the masses. His program for ‘national popular’ states is aimed
at gaining food security, bolstering small farming, reducing or ending debt and
charitable ‘aid’ from the IMF, WB and imperialist NGOs, stopping sole reliance
on exports and building an industrial base in each country. He is for mass organizations of the oppressed,
supporting labor fronts, unions and peasant organizations to pressure this
vision. In this context he frequently
suggests combining many countries into economic and political blocs, as
his travels have shown him how ethno-nationalism, communitarianism and nationalist
divisions weaken the global south. Fragile,
small and failed states are to the benefit of imperialism, as they are more
easily manipulated and penetrated, able to produce imperialist rent with ease. In this case he mentions Western
Sahara, Eritrea and
East Timor as among questionable ‘national’
struggles.
As someone
who came out of the Maoist tradition, Amin elides over the damage wrought by
Mao’s ‘3 Worlds’ Theory,’ which posited that the USSR was the ‘main enemy’ in
the world. It was the largest split in
the Communist movement in history. Regarding
Angola, Amin advocated a
coalition government between the Soviet-backed MPLA and their U.S. and
South-African backed opponents. China supported
the latter in the armed struggle. He
jokes about the ‘little Stalins’ that seemed to proliferate in the Communist
Parties around the world. Or as he puts
it: “The
‘dictatorship of the party’ has been proven to be prone to sink into careerism,
opportunism and even corruption.” The main emphasis in the book is really on
finding a new Bandung / non-aligned alliance of national capitalists who can
stand up to imperialism – a hope that corporate globalism in 2019 has whittled
down to a very few. As such, his
emphasis on a ‘new anti-imperialist international’ seems not to be viable or class-based.
Maoism was
based on activating the peasantry as the main base for revolution. A few years
ago the urban population of the planet passed the number of rural farmers and
inhabitants. Reflecting this, few rural guerilla struggles
still exist. Amin sees the strongest in India,
the ‘Naxalite’ rebellion, as being defensive and unable to become national. China itself has no interest in a
working-class international due to it being closely intertwined with the
triad’s production facilities. Reflecting this, Amin’s ideas about the non-transferability of land in China seem
to be dated. National liberation struggles have
almost all ended, reducing the attraction of slogans of national independence and the popular
front.
The USSR
and its eastern European allies, which Amin as a Maoist called “capitalism without capitalists,” disintegrated. Thus much aid they provided in the past is
done.
Nehru, Nkrumah, Nasser, Sukarno, Tito at Bandung, 1955 |
In
retrospect, present ‘globalism’ puts past globalization into the shade, as U.S. military
control over the planet has increased while neo-liberalism has benefited the
growth of a new middle-class in the global south. This middle-class has become a bulwark for
reaction and capital, as Amin points out. Technology has enabled corporate globalism
to penetrate every location in the globe, though he has no words on this.
None of
these conditions were present at the time the ‘non-aligned’ movement was born
in 1955 in Bandung, Indonesia led by Tito, Nasser and
Nehru. All of them are gone in more ways
than one. Worldwide, it is more and more
‘class against class.’ It seems it is
only the working classes that can accomplish anti-imperialist and democratic tasks.
This book
is valuable for those who want a snapshot of the material history of many individual
countries in the global south. As part
of his analysis, Amin continually opposes ‘political Islam’ as a long-running
creation and tool of imperialism and as an anti-popular force of domestic
reaction. Amin is unrelentingly
anti-imperialist and focuses on the continuing damage done by colonialism,
neo-colonialism and imperialism to the working class, peddlers, small businessmen
and farmers of the global south.
And I
bought it at May Day Books!
Other
reviews on this subject on the blog, use blog search box, upper left: “Russia
and the Long Transition from Capitalism to Socialism,” “The Implosion of
Contemporary Capitalism,” “The Law of Worldwide Value,” (all by Amin); “The Musings of the Professors,” “The Death
of the Nation,” (Prashad) “Open Veins of Latin America,” (Galeano)“American
Exceptionalism and American Innocence,” “The Management of Savagery,” (Blumenthal)
“Islamophobia and the Politics of Empire.”
Red Frog
July 19,
2019
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